That was a confirmed Flag in $SPX with an upward breakout. Flag has already reached its trading target.

Also an Inverse H&S in $SPX but has not broken through the neckline yet. You take a long position with a close above the neckline. Not there yet.

Interesting the neckline is also the 200ma. 4th try at cracking the 200ma. Trading target for successful inverse H&S would be low to mid 1300's.

The last two inverse H&S on SPX have been failures. Will this one succeed? Time will tell. I will say that if it going to succeed we should see a close above the neckline on Friday. Monday or Tuesday at the latest.

Also, gold is not performing badly considering the drop it just suffered. The chart is very similar to August through September. That drop took 4 weeks to digest. It has only been ONE week.

Too many people on this board may be screwing around with options. Their faith in Gary is so high they are starting to gamble (against Gary's instructions). That's why there are freak outs at every wiggle. And not many here are qualified to trade futures either. WW and a few others might qualify, but the rest should be trading regular stock.

Seems to me we are re-entering the market phase where you can throw a dart at a newspaper (if those still exist) business section and buy the stock it hits with both hands. Sure, one may have to endure some short term pain...but do you really believe the outcome is going to be any different this time???

James I really don't know. The bull in me believes that it can't go below current levels. If Gold and Silver do breakdown, I think it will just retest the lows, not break them. But one thing I know for sure, is that anything is possible.

Just average into eagles or maples and don't worry about it. I would think that if the "spot price" (whatever that means anymore) reaches the lower 20's we'll either A. not be able to get physical or B. have to pay 6-8 dollar premiums.

Gold bugs are always harping about a blast off and never look back. That's not usually how it works though.

It almost always requires and extended period of steady gains before an asset can develop the momentum required for an explosive move higher. It took three years to produce the last C-wave spike.

Right now hot money is landing in other sectors, specifically energy. It will likely continue to drive that sector until it gets stretched also. Once it does then liquidity will start to leak out and look for undervalued sectors.

This is exactly what is happening right now. Liquidity began leaking out of the overextended precious metals sector and started flowing into oil.

PM sector is 'overextended'? Really?! GDX is hovering just above a 52 week low, gold just fell out of bed, and silver is actually negative for the year...not to mention BPGDM is in the cellar and forming a double bottom...hmmmm....

PM was over extended. Gold at $1900 was over 30% above the 200 DMA. Silver at $50 was 80% above the 200 DMA.

Now the sector is working off that stretch. It's probably not reasonable to expect hot money to jump right back into the same sector again especially after many investors that got in late got burned badly. It's probably going to take time to build up another base to launch the next big push.

If however the dollar really starts to collapse we could see liquidity flow into everything. If that happens then gold will likely recover quickly and the "bubble phase" will begin.

Lots of people are asking me what comes first in the First Half of 2012 - Gold back above $1740 or down to $1,440.The technical’s tell me that $1,440is the better probability.First macro wedge resolved to the downside with downside gap followed by by a so far not convincing bounce around the 200 DMA (you have to go with a bear flag which is a continuation pattern). For now it still rests on a LT uptrend but if $1530-50 doesn`t hold (and I think it will not) we can see $1400-40.

It is difficult (for me anyway) to follow what the dollar chart is trying to do here. It might be easier for the time being to look at $SPX. It essentially tells the same story (in reverse). $SPX is saying it wants to move higher. Of course the move might fail. But if $SPX can close above the neckline, that might signal at least one more good week.

Re SPX, Check out the monthly chart. So far, the move off of the highs is typical of the last couple bear mkts in terms of slope at this number of months into the bear. The snap back to the 200 day felt huge because we got so stretched on the initial thrust lower. It'll take a break of October's high - the first test of the 200 day - to kill this bear for sure.

John,I see what you're saying on the monthly charts. The price patters are similar, although the indicators such as the MACD do differ. I guess we'll see. I'm certainly not making any predictions. Just waiting for some kind of confirmation.

Danno ..I'll give this to the bulls ...it is unusual for a bear to poke at the 200 day this many times ...and I agree, a break of the most recent test (earlier in December) should trigger buying/covering.

If the dollar breaks down violently then gold is going to enter the final bubble phase of the bull market.

At the moment the current daily cycle in the dollar is right in the middle of being right or left translated. A failed daily cycle would confirm not only an intermediate top but most likely a three year cycle top as well. That would have high odds of signaling the beginning of the bubble phase.

All the conditions are in place. Now we just have to wait and see how the dollar cycle plays out.

I understand most humans want instant gratification but in this business it rarely happens.

If we were day traders, we would enter trades early even after hours, then settle that day. Probably between 11 A.M. and 2 P.M.

If we were week traders, we would enter trades for Monday and settle between Wednesay afternoon and Friday by noon. You know the schtich. Expectations seem to be that we will only hold positions for a couple of days.

Sherrie,You know the answer to that one too. In the current market there is no strong trend. Without a strong trend the only way to make money is to buy and sell quickly.

If we get a trend then we can lengthen our holding times. I'm guessing you are a subscriber so you already know all these things. Are you just upset because the market won't do what you want it to do or are you just being deliberately obtuse?

Once I’m convinced that the cyclical bear market has reached its bottom at the next four year cycle low (due in late 2012) then I will concentrate on aggressively growing the model portfolio again, mostly by investing in the secular bull market in precious metals and possibly in agriculture.

I feel your frustration. I think we are in a time than know one really knows for sure the next direction. There is no crisis yet. And crisis I mean daily headlines and market panic. It's all contained or hidden from the public until they can't hide it anymore.

Next year is an election year so there will be tricks that we can't even fathom that the boys on wall street are going to play.

SherriB's attitude is a reflection of the very very low sentiment in the PM sector. I keep seeing predictions of lower levels, and lots of people waiting for that to happen. Typically, the market isn't so generous.

Sherrie, like many people, want to go back to the Old Turkey strategy that worked so well last year and in the spring. Unfortunately the market isn't in that kind of environment right now. Trading that strategy will just cause one to get whipsawed back and forth and go nowhere for months. Or worse, buy high and sell low.

I understand the frustration but that doesn't mean we can bend the market to our will. We just have to make the best out of what the market gives us. Right now it's not giving us a strong trend so we have to trade more frequently in order to make any money.

GDXJ owns stocks in companies classified as Passive Foreign Investment Companies - non-U.S. corporations having 50% or more of their assets invested in cash or securities, or having 75% or more of their gross income originating from passive sources, including but not limited to interest, dividends and rents. In other words, these foreign companies primarily derive their revenue streams from investments, rather than operations.

GDXJ has to take its share of the income of the Passive Foreign Investment Companies into its own income, and then distribute 90% of that to shareholders (net of expenses not covered by the dividends and interest on other securities, securities lending, and so on).

I get my cholesterol checked every year, to be sure it stays over 200. The Harvard Health Study (40,000 men for 40 years) showed absolutely no relationship between cholesterol levels in the food you eat and cholesterol levels in your blood. There also was no relationship between cholesterol levels in the blood and heart disease.But there was a slight - not statistically significant - relationship between cholesterol levels in the blood and strokes. The higher the cholesterol level, the lower the number of strokes. So I try to keep mine up.Incidentally, this study was the largest and longest study of any medical condition ever. The doctor/researcher who headed the study has written several books blasting the myth that cholesterol has anything to do with heart attacks.But Lipitor has been a $6 billion a year business for Pfizer, one of the largest spenders on lobbying, and he has been drowned out.

A couple words on oil versus gold. Oil will always win out since it makes sense to trade something that directly affects real inflation. However the problem with oil is that it will cap as soon as the economy falters, ie real demand can't afford it. This is what, imo, caused the last oil crash...printing=run to the best inflation hedge=oil, and then we start talking about $300 oil, and then we crash...crap, now what! Gold, back in we go...

I have locked my old turkey play in metals, doesn’t make sense for me to trade out of a long-term winning trade to save a couple bucks. A couple quality miners, in my opinion, and physical.

In terms of Oil, nice to get back to looking at companies again in terms of fundies. With a slightly bearish to positive oil market, ie we stay above $75, it is pretty easy(ah hum, easy in market terms) to make 20%+ off of dividends, selling calls, and capital gains.Trading into this sector is not a bad idea. I, however, will not be bouncing around in the sector with overnight trades, I see a more prolonged venture. Of course if oil breaks out and surges in a parabolic or mini-parabolic move, that would be the sell everything button.

The market is almost certainly going to confirm a right translated daily cycle next week. It will also likely confirm a right translated intermediate cycle. Right translated intermediate cycles are what bull markets are made of.

What is rule #1?

Be careful you aren't taking low percentage trades just for the sake of trading.

The market is almost certainly going to confirm a right translated daily cycle next week. It will also likely confirm a right translated intermediate cycle. Right translated intermediate cycles are what bull markets are made of.

What is rule #1?

Be careful you aren't taking low percentage trades just for the sake of trading.

December 23, 2011 1:08 PM

I guess that would be indicating a Dollar Drop and GOLD surge , if it plays out that way?

Ryan,Selling short is a very tough if not the toughest way to make money in this business. Considering that, why would you voluntarily choose to do something that has low odds of producing profits?

Successful short selling involves reading financial statements and ferreting out sick companies. If you aren't prepared to do that kind of due diligence and instead think you can successfully make long term money selling short with no more effort than looking at chart patterns you are almost guaranteed to lose money over the long haul.

Why do something if your odds of success are low? In this business we can choose to only take trades when we have an edge.

One of the goals in writing the SMT newsletter is to try and break people of destructive habits.

I learned those three trading rules the hard way, by losing money. One can either learn from my mistakes or you can also learn the hard way. (It will be cheaper if you learn from my mistakes)

Trading just for the sake of trading, whether or not one has an edge isn't going to earn you any long term profits. And if you aren't in this to accumulate long term gains then why are you doing this?

Perhaps treasuries are about to implode and that's why the market is taking off?

Look at the daily and weekly chart for TBT, for example, or $tnx. Oversold as can be and positively diverging. Of course they can get even more oversold, but probably worth a gamble with a tight stop.

That would be the fed's nightmare scenario, imo--mass dumping of treasuries. It's the one thing that could replace QE in terms of spiking the money supply.

I have a sneaking suspicion that gold and silver pop next week, then perhaps retest the lower BB the following week or two. They should start basing for real this time. It really all depends on the 10 and 20 year treasuries though. Should be interesting.

If rates start rising i have a feeling all of those excess reserves parked at the Fed come flooding into the system. Once a critical threshold is reached, the herd will rush for the exits. Of course, no one knows what that threshold is.

I jumped on WFC on December 14th when Gary made his DCT call on the USD and I'm +7.42% fro m my cost basis of $25.86. I can't think of a better run bank in the US and a sector of the market that'll suprise everyone in 2012. I only wish I would have jumped on them the Wednesday before Thanksgiving. Oh well.

I see you are impressed with oil but didn't we get too far too soon - four days and almost 8% increase. The sentiment must be very bulish for oil. Also - in equities spring 2009 the first IC after 4 year low was RT and then we had LT IC to consolidate. Charts look quite similar.

Excellent observation---and a very likely scenario IMO. It would potentially cause an immediate spike in the spx and pm's--say 1Q12, which would lead to a 'bottom' in the bond market 2Q12 followed by a flight back to 'safety' once the spx begins the vicious bear market decline into the impending 4 year cycle low. All of this would eventually lead to (sustained) higher interest rates and inflation---while further eroding confidence in the USD. If the USD is not safe, and USTs are not safe....perhaps a shiny yellow metal is? Timing may be stretched or compressed nut it seems to line up fairly well with the cycles and PM bull.

It's nice to dream about another parabolic move right on the heels of the last one, but that's not usually how markets work.

Probably the only way that scenario unfolds is if the dollar really starts to collapse aggressively. Even then I would expect gold to consolidate for another intermediate cycle before breaking out to new highs.

I'm becoming more and more convinced that the precious metals sector is going to be dead money for at least several more months.

At this point I would really prefer gold breaks down below $1535 as that would signal that we are still in a D-Wave decline, and that would at some point generate a violent A-wave rally rather than a continuing long consolidation.

Yes---and the obvious problem is that rates cannot stay at 0 infinitely without disastrous consequences. Once QE is no longer effective...or worse, has the opposite effect, then it's UH OHHHHH or DOH (if you're a Simpsons fan) time!! I think that time is closing in on us more quickly than most people think.

Perhaps you are correct...but the part where you say, 'that's not usually how markets work' speaks volumes. Seems like 'usual' markets are over considering money printing and forcing interest rates to 0 for years. It's all about bubbles and ponzi schemes!

The TBTF money center banks have been destroyed w/ a flat yield curve thanks to QE. The banks have seen their NIM (Net Interest Margin) fall to zero... Remember banks borrow short and lend long and with as flat yield curve they don't make money. If rates were to rise banks would start loaning money and their NIM would go up. I think the FED stress tests on the TBTF banks are going to allow names such as WFC, JPM increase dividends to share holders around the time the US Bond Market starts to sell off. All of the fools who piled into Treasuries in 2011 will get smoked in 2012 and beyond. Anyone looking to refinance or buy real-estate had better lock and lock yesterday as 30 YR FXD rate loans were 3.875% the other day.

It's not really about that, it's about human emotions. It's just going to be pretty hard to generate another strong momentum move after so many traders and investors got crushed during this D-Wave decline.

Generally speaking after traders get stung in one sector they usually don't come right back for fear of getting bitten again.

The hot money tends to find a another sector. Then the process repeats. Momentum builds until finally the asset class gets stretched to the upside followed by a regression to the mean profit-taking event, and then liquidity goes looking for a another undervalued sector.

Gary I think your call on oil is the best bet in the near term. Reason i think that is it is the least overvalued relative to TBT. It could really rally like crazy if this whole bond scenario plays out.

I dont see gold outperforming anytime soon either. The weekly MACDs of gold vs anything else are still extended. But it doesnt necessarily have to go down in nominal terms either. i.e., I dont think it has much further to fall in dollar terms.

But for me, gold and silver are THE endgame in terms of gains in purchasing power as the fiat system implodes.

Well said Gary...I'm still learning! Sometimes I lose sight of the fact that most investors do not even consider cycle analysis nor do they have near 24/7 access to one of the best out there....and yes, that would be you...but don't let that go to your head!!

MERRY CHRISTMAS and a sincere Thank You for all that you do (and endure from people like me) every day!!

Went short S+P at close today with few e-mini's. Probably have to hold for couple weeks or get stopped out 1290 area. I like the fact cnbc reporting economy improving, as if. Now if Big Ben gets publicly busy, I'm out. Like the model portfolio play also. Merry xmas all.

In oder to short the s&p for anything but a day trade, you have to look at bond yields and where they are likely headed in the next 6 months. The US economy sucks, but i think gary is going to be proven correct. We are pn the verge of hyperinflation and thats no hype. Look what the zimbawe stock market did in nominal terms.

This week’s reading is the biggest net long position ever for commercial traders of euro futures (since 1999). The commercial traders are still at a high net short position toward the dollar, reliably associated with important tops for the US Dollar Index.

Do you consider miners a lost cause in the "dead money" consolidation scenario? Your premise is that hot money won't flow into assets that have just recently gone parabolic and crashed, but as we know this never played out for miners like it did silver and gold. Perhaps miners will break out while gold and silver consolidate, especially if the "risk on" trade is on full force?

"Also did anybody notice anything strange about the GDXJ chart in stockcharts. The prices seem to be a dollar+ lower after the distribution!?"

- ver

GDXJ paid out a dividend distribution of $1.212/share. A dividend distribution lowers the NAV of the ETF by the amount of the distribution; thus, the value of the ETF will always drop by the amount of the distribution. You will pay tax on the distribution but get no real value from it since the value of the EFT drops by the amount of the dividend.

This notion that the economy is broken just doesn't hold up to observation. The restaurants and stores are packed. At the moment I think it's more likely we see inflation start to pick up next year than a deflationary recession.

I'm also starting to consider that with all the currency intervention that the four year cycle in stocks is starting to stretch to 5-6 years. What we were expecting in 2012 may not arrive until 2014 and it may come as an extreme inflationary event rather than a deflationary one.

Who knows, as perverse at it souunds, money may start flowing from Asia back to the US. E.g. if you look at real estate prices, those in Asia are starting to decline while in the US real estate may have bottomed.

As is typical for miners I think their performance is going to be anchored to what happens in the stock market. If stocks are about to notch new highs, miners may finally breakout sucking in money flows and leaving gold and silver to chop around for the next several months. One can't ignore that the big boys have been reallocating PM metal positions to PM stocks. But any sign of the bear resuming and all these trigger-happy hedgies are going to dump miners till the cows come home. So once again it comes back to the inflation / deflation debate for any clarity. Joy..

The economy in my metropolitan area is sending mixed signals. Almost no one I know is out of work. No one in my building is behind on rent and we have no vacancies.

But even thought the malls were busy on Friday, I had no problem getting to stores and did not have to wait in line. That seemed odd on a Friday before Christmas. At Best Buy the cashier asked me to swipe my card again because she had assumed I would be charging my purchase instead of using debit. So I asked, "Have most people today been charging to credit?" She said, "Everyone in my line today has charged to credit. You're the first person to use debit." It was 7 pm. That was a little creepy.

All I can say is I've never seen this area so bad. Violent crime rising, high unemployment, and to top it off cuts to the police force on top of the cuts they just had. I work in the medical field and the uninsured are close to out numbering the insured. On top of my PM investing and SM gambling, I also invest in guns and ammo. A nice Smith and Wesson 357 revolver will hold its value better than SPY.

FWIW.. a possible longer term scenario I'm looking at. Note the massive multi-year Symmetrical Triangle. Of course there is no law that says the triangle cannot shock everyone and breakout to the upside. I'll be cautious as (or if) we near the upper trend line. Symmetrical Triangles typically breakout (up or down) within 75% of the way to the triangle's point (looking left to right). We are way past 75% so anything could happen at any time and it could be explosive.

Another word of warning. In spite of what just happened with the downward breakout of Gold's Symmetrical Triangle, Symmetrical Triangles actually breakout to the upside 54% of the time.

ok, if silver does not recover next week to above 30.5, then we may be heading to $22/$23 ... ay it will hurt ... we close the December month at that price level, and recover in January ... this senario is based on maybe silver is still in phase 1 and will transition to pase 2 after the correction is over... similar to what happened to gold at $1000So for those with dry powder ... load up the trucks at that level, for me it's going to be painful since I'm loaded in the 2x and 3x silver ... ay ay ay

I'm looking for $20.00 to 22.50 as the spot price of silver before I re-load on the poor mans gold. I dropped by the coin shop the other day and they said people are dumping a lot of junk silver and the global industrial slowdown has created a glut in the market. The guy at the coin shop said he'd have no trouble getting as many 2011 Silver Eagle Monster Boxes as I wanted... He said he'd more than likely drop the $3 -$4 premium over spot that he ussually charges per/coin after calling and checking in with his supplier. I'm getting the feeling that gold is going to break $1535 confirming the D-Wave and the washout into late January or early March is going to blow everyones minds. I'm thinking that by March 13th, 2012 gold will be under $1250 and silver under $20 for a AU:AG Ratio of 62.50. That's what I'm looking for a complete pukefest in early 2012 making everyone and I mean everyone give up on the PM bull market. Bring on the washout!

I was reading some things online this weekend that during the last crash in PM in 2008, specifically October of 2008 when silver was about $10, that premiums on phisical silver was as high as 2x spot. Do you remember anything like that?

"Just checking in to report Spain’s biggest dealer is out of gold stock except for Kilo and 1/2 Kilo bars. No silver. They are still advertising 1oz silver Phillarmonics at EUR 18. At today’s change, that is USD 24. Only 2.5 times the COMEX price..."

I don't remember anyone charging 2X's spot back in 2008, but back in May '11 when silver dropped from $50 my local coin dealer wouldn't sell anything until he knew what price he'd be able to replace the inventory at. My local shop seems to run a JIT (Just In Time) inventory system and seems to be out of stock a lot when the price of silver drops quickly. He tells me that he can order anything I want from his supplier but wait times vary. He said gold doesn't have the wild swings in demand or price and that he's selling it at normal rates. After talking to him about the recent price action and the publics response to metal prices I get the feeling that he feels like we're in a lull period or trough where J6Pack went crazy when gold was $1800+ and silver was $40+ and now J6Pack feels sorry for himself now that gold is under $1600 and silver is under $30. The average guy hasn't given up on gold and silver (yet) but a D-Wave decline would make the Johnny Come Lately's who bought above $1600 and $30 puke up his positions because of fear. Because of the extra premiums to deal in physical gold ($50 -$75 per/ounce) and silver ($1 - $4 per/ounce) and the fact that dealers get slammed with inventory durning panics we've got a really sweet setup brewing.

FYI: The economy stinks where I'm at (Stockton, CA), people have lost 65% of their home equity, local unmeployment is 16%+ and we set an alltime record in homicides in 2011 all of which could effect my local market and coin dealer sentiment. Gary's in L.V. which is pretty bad so maybe he could call around or walk in and have conversations with pawn shop or coin dealers and update us SMTs with what is going on there.

Thanks for the update. I'm in the bay area so I'm not to far from you. Stockton is the foreclosure capital of the US. Things aren't too bad here. Still see many new cars on the road, malls packed, real-estate is still in the dumps, unless you talk to a realtor :-) The high end housing is finally starting to crack with big price cuts. Keep us posted on the premiums for silver.

FYI. The MACD (fast line) of the weekly $SPX is threatening to cross above the zero line. That could trigger a multi-week or even multi-month rally. It's angle of attack suggests there is a significant chance it will be successful.

Agree with Gary. Sears/Kmart was mismanaged in the face of daunting competition.

Comment about Stockton, CA. It has always been a dump in the middle of nowhere and home prices are only coming back to reality. Stockton is just a place to sleep for commuters to Silicon Valley. There is no industry in Stockton, so few well paying jobs and mostly in the service sector.

"This notion that the economy is broken just doesn't hold up to observation. The restaurants and stores are packed. At the moment I think it's more likely we see inflation start to pick up next year than a deflationary recession."

Look at the retail sector (RTH). I've been noticing this for quite some time. The bearish in this economy goes a bit unwarranted. There are many that still think we are in a recession. How could we have a recession with record retail sales numbers in Oct and on the black Friday weekend.

Using anecdotal observations to judge the likely hood of recession is probably a mistake. Especially if your observations occur in a region that doesn't accurately represent the nation as a whole. For example the area I live in is infested with high net-worth individuals who are generally unaffected by economic downturns in-regards to their purchasing habits and thus would not be a good gauge of consumers as a whole. Additionally a recession generally occurs following a peak in economic activity (see Economic Cycle).

Strat81 said...Using anecdotal observations to judge the likely hood of recession is probably a mistake. Especially if your observations occur in a region that doesn't accurately represent the nation as a whole. For example the area I live in is infested with high net-worth individuals who are generally unaffected by economic downturns in-regards to their purchasing habits and thus would not be a good gauge of consumers as a whole. Additionally a recession generally occurs following a peak in economic activity (see Economic Cycle)."

New Jersey’s Hunterdon County, the hilly region of horse farms and weekend retreats where last year’s median household income was almost $100,000, is a surprising new face of federal food aid.

The percentage of U.S. households using food stamps has more than doubled in six of the 10 wealthiest counties in the nation as more residents find themselves out of work and unable to sell their homes. The increase among counties with more than 65,000 people was greatest in Hunterdon County, according to Census Bureau data compiled by Bloomberg.Hunterdon, whose 2010 median household income of $97,874 was the highest in New Jersey and fourth-highest in the U.S, saw food-stamp usage surge 513 percent between 2007 and 2010, although the overall numbers are small.

Stockton has been and continues to be an agricultural based economy. Local politicians and media outlets have been long beholden to a select number of local developers and the public service unions at the expense of long-term strategic planning. Now that capital has been misallocated by government officials Stockton will be forced to file Chapter 9 Municipal Bankruptcy sometime over the next couple of years. Tax receipts continue to fall while long-term obligations accelerate in earnest as baby boomers defined benefit plans (pension) obligations come due. Local schools have been ravaged by state budget shortfalls creating a negative feedback loop that will be felt for many decades in this area. Hopefully the Central Valley can produce the food the world wants, needs and will be forced paying up for to survive in the coming years. The weather is great and we're less than 100 miles from the Golden Gate, Yosemite, Lake Tahoe and Napa Valley all with a median home price of about $135k. Overall Stockton CA isn't a bad place to work and live if you're educated and have a skill set in demand.

Stockton will not be the only city to go BK. As we all know, there are many other cities on the brink. Your are seeing it on the monthly jobs numbers when public unemployment is increasing and private is steady or improving. Many who can are leaving public sectors before they change the pension system.

Meredith Whitney got it right when she called for many large municipalities to go BK. I just think her timing was a little early.

A team of highly trained monkeys has been dispatched to deal with this situation.

If you see them, show them this information:q4FvAhbAGxTuHbnjEf1vc0gfi0lw66S_mzaGC2UPddGbKhvNeJhKwLqcZWWsE1xlYmAFxS0-mjv8oUnt49KDxdOy716izjEfa_amGvHNTjcNr3C_9C_0DJq-wA5-np-9ttHxbZLxC3n_R0SkPNyXFCHGc6LmcPSJI13xfEb1ooqBOJC-vyCC

A friend just emailed me about the 3 charts I posted and asked if the GDX could mstch the GOLD DROP possibilities?

SO I will just clarify a point or two.

1) IF GOLD dropped to target "D" noted in the GOLD A-B-C-D chart , then I would imagine the GDX chart would experience a break of support in a "shake out" , but find support at the 200dma .

2) GOLD may just drop to retest the area noted as "B". We are almost there, and Miners look to be bottoming.

Due to the $BPGDM and other factors, it just seems that we are in a bottoming area, BUT because of the "world falling apart at the seems" scenario...One would want to expect that "ANYTHING -CAN-HAPPEN"..when investors return from VACATION next week.

I hold a "core" of Miners, and I'm comfortable with that , and am watching cycles possibilities, charts possibilities, and other factors.

bloomberg just had a little report that gold will have a up year in 2012 and then down for 3 years after that. ill just follow gary in real time. that keeps me from trying to figure all this out. which i cant do

Have you ever looked into MESA Sine Wave cycles? They usually align quite nicely with your cycle counts especially if you use a study that dynamically calculates the dominant cycle length. It printed daily cycle resistance (possible cycle top) today on /CL and /ES.

Investing in the financial markets can involve considerable risk. Past performance is not necessarily an indication of future performance. The information included in The Smart Money Tracker and The SMT subscribers daily updates is prepared for educational purposes and is not a solicitation, or an offer to buy or sell any security or use any particular system. Information is based on historical research using data believed to be reliable, but there is no guarantee as to its accuracy. G.D.S L.L.C., nor Gary Savage, do not represent themselves as acting in the position of an investment adviser or investment manager for funds that are not under their direct control and fiduciary responsibility. GDS L.L.C., Gary Savage, will not provide you with personally tailored advice concerning the nature, potential, value or suitability of any particular security, portfolio or securities, transaction, investment strategy or other matter. From time to time, GDS L.L.C., Gary Savage, may hold positions in securities mentioned, but are under no obligation to hold such position.